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Ebola disease in DRC: find out how we're responding
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Women supplement the family’s diet with nutrient-poor greens know as Lum, a food source of last resort that is foraged by hand from outside the camp. Others, like this woman, sell their Lum at the market. This amount of greens fetches about six South Sudanese pounds.
South Sudan

"The root cause of these illnesses is overcrowding and sub-standard living conditions"

Each time the three-month-old exhales, it makes a rasping sound as her breath forces its way through her tiny, infected lungs. When the infant cries, her body contorts with the effort of breathing. Until recently, she’s been connected to an oxygen machine to support her breathing. Voices from the Field - 18 Nov 2015
 
In July and August, 16,000 people arrived to the camp fleeing an upsurge in conflict and
hunger. They live in makeshift shelters in an an area of the camp not designated for
habitation. The conditions in this part of the camp are filled with trash, mud and barbed
wire.
3
South Sudan

Dramatic increase in patients in Malakal’s UN site as living conditions jeopardise health of thousands

Following an influx of 16,000 IDPs in July-August, conditions remain unacceptable and it's impacting the health of the population: the number of under-five children treated by MSF per week has increased 5-fold since June, largely as a result of poor sanitation and over-crowding. Project Update - 18 Nov 2015
 
Refugees getting water at a water point set up by MSF in Minawao refugee camp. In total, MSF set up around 10 water point in the camp.
Refugees, IDPs and people on the move

Challenges in Responding to Massive Displacements in Resource-poor Settings

MSF's Research Unit on Humanitarian Stakes and Practices (UREPH) is pleased to announce the publication of the e-letter "Challenges in Responding to Massive Displacements in Resource-poor Settings: The Case of Central African Republic Refugees in Eastern Cameroon" by Caroline Abu Sa'Da and Christine Jamet, written in response to the briefing by Welz "Crisis in the Central African Republic and the international response", published in African Affairs (2014, Vol. 113, No. 453, pp. 601-610). Journal article - 12 Nov 2015
 
Violence victims in Hôpital Général week 44. More than a month after the violence peak that shook Bangui, Central African capital, tensions and clashes between communities remain. MSF has received many wounded in Bangui’s General Hospital throughout the week. On 19 October, our teams took in charge 24 gunshots or stab victims.

Beginning of November, 19 other wounded (gunfire or grenade, including 4 women) have been treated in Hôpital Général. Our ambulances went to pick up the wounded from the different neighborhoods of Bangui, either Muslim or Christian areas.
Central African Republic

MSF reinforces medical activities in Bangui following more than a month of renewed violence

MSF runs mobile clinics in five sites for internally displaced people, and offers more than 1,000 consultations per week Project Update - 12 Nov 2015
 
When prices are hidden, you can essentially set the price as high as you'd like. No one would know, right? It's absurd, but unfortunately, this is the way pharmaceutical companies set prices for their life-saving pneumonia vaccines.

Sign our petition to ask Pfizer & GSK to lower the price of the pneumonia vaccine to $5/child.
http://afairshot.org
Pneumonia

MSF launches global action against Pfizer and GlaxoSmithKline to cut the price of the pneumonia vaccine

MSF launched a global petition on 12 November 2015, World Pneumonia Day, calling on pharmaceutical companies Pfizer and GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) to reduce the price of the pneumonia vaccine to US$5 per child (for all three doses) in all developing countries and for humanitarian organisations. Press Release - 12 Nov 2015
 
Agnes, 30, and her husband escaped Eritrea with the aim of reaching Europe. Unable to raise enough money for both their journeys, her husband was forced to stay in Sudan, and Agnes and her two-year-old daughter continued alone.

“I left Eritrea four years ago with my husband. My husband was made to serve in the army, and he couldn’t provide for us. If he left the army, he’d be put in jail. Many people go to jail for no reason in Eritrea. 

When we left we went to Sudan. We spent three years going from place to place, looking for work and trying to make enough money to come to Europe. Finally we made a bit of money, but it wasn’t enough for all of us, so I left with my daughter. My husband couldn’t come with us. 

Crossing the desert between Sudan and Libya was very difficult. It took seven days, non-stop, in an overcrowded car. 

After crossing the border, we moved from one town to the next until we arrived in Tripoli. We travelled in containers, like animals or objects. It was very dark and hot in the containers. Many people fainted because of the heat and some died. 

Libya is a very dangerous place. There are a lot of armed people. Some of them are Da’esh [Islamic State]. They kill a lot of people and carry out a lot of kidnappings. 

When we arrived in Tripoli they put us in a house with 600 to 700 other people and locked us in. We had no water to wash ourselves, we had very little food and we were forced to sleep one upon the other. It was very difficult for my daughter – she fell sick many times. 

There was a lot of violence. I was beaten with bare hands, with sticks, with guns. If you move, they beat you. If you talk, they beat you. We spent two months like that, being beaten every day. 

They asked us to pay to go to Europe, so I paid US$1,700 for me and my daughter. We were lucky because women and children were put on the deck of the boat. The people below were in the dark and it was really hot down there. I could hear some of them saying they couldn’t breathe.

I knew that the journey would be very dangerous and difficult, especially for my daughter. But what was the alternative? We could not survive in Eritrea or Sudan. Our government does not allow people to leave. With our documents in Eritrea, there was no other way for us to get to Europe.”

ENDS
Mediterranean migration

"The only way you can leave is by sea"

Testimonies collected during search and rescue operations in the Mediterranean. Voices from the Field - 11 Nov 2015
 
A view of part of the MSF Trauma Centre in Kunduz, 14 October 2015, damaged and burnt-out following the 03 October 2015 airstrike on the facility. Photo: Victor J Blue.
Attacks on medical care

Kunduz, Afghanistan, 36°43’4.91’’N, 68°51’43.96’’

"We say: if there's no room for humanity in times of war, human civilisation as a whole will lose out in the long run. So, it's up to all of us to mobilise and urge politicians, governments and non-state armed groups to respect medical facilities. Together we shout loudly and clearly:“Stop bombing hospitals!” Opinion - 10 Nov 2015
 
Ebola survivor Isatu Tholley draws a picture during a counseling session as part of a MSF outreach mission to treat survivors of Ebola. Many Ebola survivors still suffer from physical, social and psychological problems after beating the virus. Isatu lost her father to Ebola and has been left with eye problems. Kumrabai, Sierra Leone, 3/11/2015.
Ebola and haemorrhagic fevers

“Science should be at the service of survivors”

Sierra Leone may be declared Ebola-free in early November, but caring for the country's 4,051 Ebola survivors remains a big challenge. Many survivors report joint pain and vision problems. Voices from the Field - 7 Nov 2015
 
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Ebola and haemorrhagic fevers

Crisis update - 2 November 2015

The emergency is not over – the Ebola epidemic in West Africa continues in Guinea where three new cases were recorded last week. Crisis Update - 3 Nov 2015
 
Namiel's husband, Biel, thirty years old, was wounded by a gunshot during a cattle raid. The bullet entered by his neck and exit by upper lip. He was refered in Agok by the Mayom's MSF health center, 85 km away. He is really lucky to be alive, but he cannot be operated here because he needs a maxilofacial surgery.
South Sudan

Trapped by violence in Unity state

Spiralling violence in Unity state is having a devastating effect on the civilian population and leading to an unprecedented humanitarian crisis. “The civilian population is being subjected to repeated and targeted violence,” says MSF emergency manager Tara Newell. “MSF has not seen this level of violence and brutality before.” Press Release - 30 Oct 2015
Four mothers posing in a corridor of the Hospital in Bili. All four of them are staying in the hospital with their child, that's suffering from a severe case of malaria. Since the beginning of the project in 2016, the pediatric ward already treated more than 4.000 cases of complicated/severe form of malaria.
Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF)

Independent medical humanitarian assistance

We provide medical assistance to people affected by conflict, epidemics, disasters, or exclusion from healthcare. Our teams are made up of tens of thousands of health professionals, logistic and administrative staff - most of them hired locally. Our actions are guided by medical ethics and the principles of independence and impartiality. We are a non-profit, self-governed, member-based organisation.

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